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By Subject > African-American History Month > Children's Books
Recommendations...
 | Great African Americans Coloring Book by Taylor Oughton Accurately rendered, ready-to-color collection of illustrations spotlights 45 remarkable individuals: Frederick Douglass, Thurgood Marshall, Marian Anderson, Althea Gibson, Duke Ellington, many more. Captions.
all books in Standard Coloring Books
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| Products in Children's Books |  |  |  | African Animals Stickers by Winky Adam Kids will love these eye-catching cut-paper images of a silverback gorilla, zebra, chimpanzee, ostrich, and 16 other creatures — ideal for decorating envelopes, paper and craft projects and any clean, flat surface.
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|  | African Folk Tales by Hugh Vernon-Jackson, Yuko Green Entertaining stories handed down from generation to generation among tribal cultures include "The Magic Crocodile," "The Hare and the Crownbird," "The Boy in the Drum," 15 others. 19 illustrations.
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|  | African Girl and Boy Paper Dolls by Yuko Green Two charming dolls, 32 colorful tribal costumes: Swazi warrior, Zulu dancer, Masai nomad, Senegalese sorcerer, more. Authentic accessories; identifying captions.
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|  | African Plains Coloring Book by Dianne Gaspas-Ettl Forty-one realistic scenes of wildlife in their natural habitats, including a giraffe at a water hole and a cheetah with its young on an abandoned termite mound. Captions.
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|  | African Plains Sticker Picture by Dianne Gaspas-Ettl Sticker images of lions, zebras, elephants, and other animals bring life to a sunny background scene of grassland complete with waterhole, vegetation, and distant mountains. 39 stickers.
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|  | African Punch-Out Masks by A. G. Smith, Josie Hazen Six colorful, exotic masks, including a hyena mask from Mali and a Bakuba dance mask from the Congo, are ideal for social studies projects, parties, as room decorations, more. No scissors needed.
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|  | African Village Sticker Picture by A. G. Smith The work, play, and ceremonial life of an African village come to vivid life with 30 reuable stickers depicting people making baskets, preparing food, tending livestock, and performing other activities.
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|  | The Amistad Coloring Book by Peter F. Copeland Twenty-eight meticulously rendered, ready-to-color illustrations, among them the capture of Africans in their homeland, their revolt aboard ship in Havana, and their successful defense by former U.S. President John Quincy Adams.
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|  | Famous African-American Women by Cal Massey Informative coloring book highlights achievements of 45 notable women, among them Coretta Scott King, Maya Angelou, Hattie McDaniel, Toni Morrison, Ella Fitzgerald, Leontyne Price, and Shirley Chisholm. Captions.
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|  | Famous African-American Women Paper Dolls by Tom Tierney Sixteen well-researched dolls, each with one additional costume, depict Sojourner Truth, Mary McLeod Bethune, Zora Neale Hurston, Althea Gibson, Rosa Parks, Leontyne Price, Maya Angelou, Shirley Chisholm, 8 more. 32 color illustrations.
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| |  | Great African Americans Coloring Book by Taylor Oughton Accurately rendered, ready-to-color collection of illustrations spotlights 45 remarkable individuals: Frederick Douglass, Thurgood Marshall, Marian Anderson, Althea Gibson, Duke Ellington, many more. Captions.
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|  | Great African-American Athletes by Taylor Oughton Forty-five expertly rendered illustrations of Willie Mays, Jim Brown, Jesse Owens, Wilma Rudolph, Joe Louis, Muhammad Ali, Magic Johnson, Julius Erving, Arthur Ashe, many other remarkable athletes. Fact-filled captions.
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| |  | Map of Africa Sticker Picture by Pat Stewart Thirty full-color reusable stickers, applied to a map of Africa, help youngsters identify Egypt, Libya, Nigeria, Congo, and other countries in the world's second largest continent.
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|  | The Story of the Amistad by Emma Gelders Sterne Gripping tale of the epic 1839 revolt, aboard the schooner Amistad, of Africans bound for slavery in the New World. Young readers will thrill to the book's "you-are-there" flavor.
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|  | The Story of the Underground Railroad by Peter F. Copeland Forty-four dramatically illustrated scenes tell the story of the secret network that took runaway slaves from southern states to the North and Canada between 1830 and 1860. Descriptive captions.
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